Marry
in sentence
856 examples of Marry in a sentence
His brother, however, having come to see him next morning, asked about her, and Alexis Vronsky told him frankly that he regarded his union with her as a marriage, that he hoped to arrange a divorce for her, and would then
marry
her, and that meanwhile he considered her his wife, just like any other wife, and he asked his brother to say so to their mother and to his own wife.
He,' he meant Koznyshev, 'could have made the best match in Russia any time; now he is no longer so young, but all the same I am sure many would
marry
him even now...
You say I must
marry
Alexis, and that I don't consider that.
As soon as she gets the divorce she will
marry
Vronsky.
Now she was jealous of the coarse women with whom, through his bachelor connections, he might so easily have intercourse; now of the Society women whom he might meet; now of some imaginary girl whom he might
marry
after repudiating her.
This last jealousy tormented her more than anything else, especially since in an expansive moment he had carelessly told her that his mother understood him so little that she had tried to persuade him to
marry
the young Princess Sorokina.
'It is perfectly indifferent to me what your mother thinks and whom she wishes to
marry
you to,' she went on, putting down her cup with a trembling hand.
Well, I get divorced, and Alexis Alexandrovich gives me Serezha, and I
marry
Vronsky!'Remembering Karenin, she pictured him to herself with extraordinary vividness, as if he stood before her, with his mild, dull, lifeless eyes, the blue veins of his white hands, his intonations, his cracking fingers, and remembering the feeling that had once existed between them and which had also been called love, she shuddered with revulsion.
Her mother, Brulé, the widow of a pikeman who died in the mine, after having sent her daughter to work in a factory, swearing that she should never
marry
a collier, had never ceased to be angry since she had married, somewhat late, Pierron, a widower with a girl of eight.
Only you must swear that you'll make your mother decide to let us
marry.
You see if she is confined, and obliged to marry, what shall we do for a living then?"
Cécile did not displease him, and he was quite willing to
marry
her to be agreeable to his aunt, but he showed no amorous fever; like a youth of experience, who, he said, was not easily carried away now.
He'll have to
marry
me."
"But when a little glass of vinegar is worth 1,500,000 francs, its taste is a small price to pay.""I'm sorry I didn't
marry
the gal," the Canadian said, throwing up his hands with an air of discouragement.
But Emma's face always rose before his eyes, and a monotone, like the humming of a top, sounded in his ears, "If you should
marry
after all!
If you should marry!"
Why did I marry?"
You will
marry!
Every day I
marry
young couples whose grandparents I married long ago.
This young woman received a legacy, went to make her confession to the cure Chelan, and revealed to him her intention to
marry
Julien.
'This young fool,' he soon reminded himself, 'has made himself a sort of reputation in my house; Valenod may take him on, or else he will
marry
Elisa, and, in either case, he can afford to laugh at me in his heart.'
'That, no doubt, is why,' she continued bitterly, 'he refused at the time to
marry
me.
'I am used to Louise,' he said to himself, 'she knows all my affairs; were I free to
marry
again tomorrow I could find no one fit to take her place.'
For my own part, I have never had any opinion of him since he refused to
marry
Elisa, it was a fortune ready made; and all because now and again she pays a secret visit to M. Valenod.''Ah!' said M. de Renal, raising his eyebrows as far as they would go, 'what, did Julien tell you that?''No, not exactly; he has always spoken to me of the vocation that is calling him to the sacred ministry; but believe me, the first vocation for the lower orders is to find their daily bread.
Polichinelle intends to marry, and counts up on his fingers the different things he will need for the house, and loses count afresh at every moment.'
...The cost of such a life is nothing; I can, as I choose,
marry
Miss Elisa, or become Fouque's partner ...But the traveller who has just climbed a steep mountain, sits down on the summit, and finds a perfect pleasure in resting.
Nevertheless, there were dreadful days on which she could not banish the thought of the absolute happiness which she would enjoy, if, suddenly left a widow, she were free to
marry
Julien.
Look at Croisenois who hopes to
marry
me; he is nice and polite, he has perfect manners like M. de Rouvray.
He is madly in love with her, he is going to
marry
her.
'If M. de Croisenois is taking all this calmly, he must feel that it will be less compromising for the young person whom he intends to
marry
to have me seized before the moment when I shall have entered her room.'
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